Tuesday, 29 January 2019
EXTRUSIVE VOLCANIC FEATURES
Extrusive volcanic features.
Craters
Crater is a bowl shaped depression at the top
of a volcano caused by past volcanic eruptions. Craters can be thought of as
the volcano “blowing its lid” where volcanic materials, such as ash, lava and
rock fragments, are released. A volcanic crater is relatively small, usually
spanning about a half a mile in diameter or less, and can fill with water to
form a crater lake.
Caldera
If a volcanic eruption causes the magma chamber to empty, the volcano can
implode, forming a larger depression known as a caldera. So a caldera can be
defined as a large volcanic crater formed by the collapse of the central part
of the volcano.
The
term 'caldera' comes from the Latin language and means 'cooking pot.' While a
caldera would make an awfully big pot of soup, you can see how the large bowl
shape of a caldera, along with the smoky look of the ash cloud rising above it
after an eruption, could prompt the name.
These
are the simplest type of volcano which occusr when particles and blobs of lava
are ejected from a volcanic vent. The lava is blown violently into the air and
the pieces rain down around the vent.
Composite
Volcanoes
Composite
or strato volcanoes these volcanoes have a conduit system inside them that
channels magma from deep within the Earth to the surface. They can have
clusters of vents, with lava breaking through walls, or issuing from fissures
on the sides of the mountain. With all this material coming out, they can grow
thousands of meters tall. As we’ve seen with the famous Mount Saint Helens,
composite volcanoes can explode violently. : Mount Rainier, Mount Fuji, and
Mount Cotopaxi, for example.
Shield
Volcanoes:
These
are large, broad volcanoes that look like shields from above. The lava that
pours out of shield volcanoes is thin, so it can travel for great distances
down the shallow slopes of the volcano. These volcanoes build up slowly over
time with hundreds of eruptions creating many layers. Perhaps the best known
shield volcanoes that make up the Hawaiian Islands, especially Mauna Loa and
Mauna Kea.
Lava
Domes
Volcanic
or lava domes are created by small masses of lava which are too viscous (thick)
to flow very far. The magma from volcanic domes just pile up over and around
the vent. The dome grows by expansion of the lava within and the mountain forms
from material spilling off the sides of the growing dome. Lava domes can
explode violently releasing a huge amount of hot rock and ash.
Monday, 28 January 2019
TYPES OF VOLCANOES
Types of volcanoes
There
are three main types of volcanoes
- Active volcanoes which are currently or have recently erupted.
- Dormant volcanoes which have not erupted recently and is expected to erupt at any time.
- Extinct volcanoes which has stopped to erupt and will never erupt again.
On earth, volcanism occurs in several distinct geologic
settings.
The first place of volcanic activities are those areas
associated with the boundaries of the enormous rigid plates that make up the
lithosphere (the crust and upper mantle). The majority of active terrestrial
volcanoes (roughly 80 percent) and related phenomena occur where two
lithospheric plates converge and one overrides the other, forcing it down into
the mantle to be reabsorbed.
A second major site of active volcanism is along the axis of
the oceanic ridge system, where the plates move apart on both sides of the
ridge and magma wells up from the mantle, creating new ocean floor along the
trailing edges of both plates. All of this volcanic activity occurs underwater.
Iceland is the best example. The magma that are erupted along the oceanic
ridges are basaltic in composition.
INTRUSIVE VOLCANIC FEATURES
What are the feature resulted from volcanic activities?
Volcanic activities resulted into different intrusive and
extrusive feature.
Intrusive volcanic features
Dyke
This
is sheet of rock that is formed in the fracture in the pre -existing rock. Dyke
form when a mass of magma cuts across the bedding planes and forms a wall like
structure. Example of dyke is found in Jos plateau in Nigeria.
Sill
This
is formed when a sheet of magma lies along the bedding planes of the earth's
surface. A sill is therefore a horizontal sheet of rock that solidifies from
magma that has been injected concordantly between bedding planes; they may be
of any thickness and extend for many square of kilometers. Example of sill is a
great Whill sill in great Britain.
Batholith
Is
large body of intrusive igneous rock believed to have been crystallized at the
considerable depth below the earth's surface. They are the largest type of
pluton. Example of batholith is Idaho batholith which covers surface area of
over 15500 kilometer square.
Lopoliths
These
are saucer shaped features formed beneath the earth's surface through magma
intrusion. Lopolith forms great shallow basin when magma solidifies within the
crust a good example is bush veld igneous complex of south Africa which is
composed of both granite and basic rock.
Laccolith
This
is a sheet intrusion that has been injected between two layers of sedimentary
rock. The pressure of magma is powerful enough that the overlying strata are
forced upward giving laccolith a dome or mushroom like form with generally
planar base. Some laccolith can be found in Madagascar and Utah USA where they
has been exposed by erosion.
Phacolith
VULCANISM
Vulcanism
Vulcanism
or volcanism, refers to the process and phenomena
associated with the discharge of molten materials, pyroclastic fragments, or hot
water and steam are either intruded (injected) into the earth’s crust or
extruded (ejected) onto the surface.
There is difference between vulcanism and volcanism.
Vulcanism involves both intrusive and extrusive igneous
activities where volcanism involves only extrusive igneous activities in which
materials forced onto the surface.
The molten materials known as magma when it
inside the crust also called as lava when it onto the surface of earth.
Magma is the hot molten
rock that builds in pressure and explodes from the volcano as lava.
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Extrusive volcanic features. Craters Crater is a bowl shaped depression at the top of a volcano caused by past volcanic eruptions. Cr...
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What are the feature resulted from volcanic activities? Volcanic activities resulted into different intrusive and extrusive feature. ...
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Vulcanism Vulcanism or volcanism , refers to the process and phenomena associated with the discharge of molten materials , p...